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RULES

FOR

ADMISSION TO THE BAR

(1)*

United States Courts.

Supreme Court.

It shall be requisite to the admission of attorneys or counselors to practice in this court that they shall have been such for three years past in the Supreme Courts of the states to which they respectively belong, and that their private and professional character shall appear to be fair. The prescribed oath shall be taken.

Sup. Ct. Rule (29 Sup. Ct. Rep. xiii).

Circuit Courts of Appeals.

Although the rule of the Circuit Courts of Appeals governing the admission of attorneys, as adopted primarily, provides that, to become eligible, the applicant shall have been admitted to the Supreme Court of the United States, or any Circuit Court of the United States, and shall have taken the prescribed oath, it has since been changed to some extent in several of the circuits. In the Third circuit, the clause requiring avowal of the oath has been annulled, as respects attorneys of the Circuit Court of the Third circuit; in the Fourth circuit, a fee of $5 is required; in the Fifth and Sixth circuits, a fee of $10 is required; in the Eighth circuit, former admission to the highest court of any state within that circuit is sufficient qualification; and in the Ninth circuit, former admission to a Circuit Court is limited to admission to a Circuit Court of the Ninth circuit, and is enlarged to the extent that former admission in the highest court of any state or territory shall constitute qualification.

C. C. A. Rule and amendments thereto 150 Fed. xxvii, lxi, lxvii, lxxviii, cxi, cxxvi.

District Courts.

The rules for admission to these courts vary. Generally attorneys who have been admitted to practice in other United States courts or the highest courts of a state or territory are eligible.

FEDERAL COURT DECISIONS.

U. S. Supreme Court.

A complete set of the United States Supreme Court Reports (1790 to 1913) consists of 225 volumes. Everything subsequent to vol. 105 is covered by the Supreme Court Reporter (of the National Reporter System) in a set of 32 volumes. The Supreme Court Reporter makes currently one volume a year, covering all the current decisions filed by the court, and is supplied to subscribers in advance sheets as published; these being displaced at the end of the year by a bound volume which contains everything in the official edition, and is equipped with a table giving the official page references.

There are other editions of the United States Reports,-one giving vols. 1 to 225 in 56 books, and another giving vols. 1 to 225 in about 185 books.

U. S. Circuit Courts of Appeals.

These courts were established in 1891, and all opinions from the beginning have been reported currently in the Federal Reporter. (See below.) The back volumes of this set, therefore, incorporate all the reported decisions from these nine courts, and the current numbers give the first report of the current decisions.

The decisions are reported separately in the C. C. A. Reports, of which 115 volumes are now completed.

U. S. Commerce Court.

This court was established in 1911, and all opinions from the beginning have been reported in the Federal Reporter.

U. S. Circuit and District Courts.

The early decisions of these courts were never systematically reported until they were gathered together for the elaborate reprint known as the Federal Cases. This includes all decisions from the establishment of the courts, 1789 to 1880, including all cases reported in the original Reports or in contemporary journals, etc., and also thousands of cases never before reported. They are arranged alphabetically, show every known citation, and are fully annotated. The set makes 30 books and a digest.

From 1880 the decisions of these courts have been systematically and currently reported in the Federal Reporter, which now (1913) has completed 200 volumes. This is the only publication which reports these important cases systematically, and it is practically the official organ of the courts. The current volumes are supplied to subscribers first in weekly advance sheets, which are afterwards displaced by the bound volumes. This set connects with the Federal Cases, the two series making a complete record of the U. S. Circuit and District Court decisions.

In 1891 the scope of the publication was extended to include the newly-established Circuit Courts of Appeals.

In 1911 the scope of the publication was extended to cover the newly-established Commerce Court.

Prices and full information given on request.

WEST PUBLISHING Co., St. Paul, Minn.

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